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...industry took in foreign partners last year, entering joint ventures with Conoco, Mitsubishi and Shell. Foreign firms have flocked into Colombia to develop the Cusiana and Cupiagua fields, which together constitute the largest find in the western hemisphere since wildcatters struck oil in 1967 in Alaska's Prudhoe Bay...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Oil: Black Gold Rush | 7/4/1994 | See Source »

...have an organ, particularly the liver, the more it becomes a part of you, and you a part of it," says Dr. Andrew Klein, a liver- transplant specialist at Johns Hopkins Medical School. Transplant surgeons admit they are among the most aggressive at trying to keep death at bay. "Considering the severe shortage of donor organs, I think there is a moral obligation to take care of the organ you receive as best you can," says Klein. He allows, though, that preserving an organ should not take precedence over preserving some semblance of pleasure in life...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Sick Boy Says Enough! | 6/27/1994 | See Source »

...Newbury Street clothing store that packman now owns that put the Schreibers' Back Bay brownstone on the cover of Boston Magazine...

Author: By Tazeen Ahmad, | Title: In Chemistry Department, Schreiber is an Anomaly | 6/9/1994 | See Source »

Often the changes aren't exactly germane--the new Armani Cafe on Newbury Street, with its black-clad, chablis-sipping malcontents struggling to get tables on the sidewalk, just doesn't make sense in a city where high society remains unseen. The Other Side Cafe moved into the Back Bay fully intent on bringing Seattle grunge to Boston; once its owners realized that Bostonians didn't need (and, in their famously parochial way, didn't want) imported culture, they toned the grunge down...

Author: By Michael K. Mayo, | Title: Saying Goodbye to Beantown | 6/9/1994 | See Source »

...enormous trunks of redwoods and Douglas firs. By full light, Thron had tallied 23 calls from murrelets. In this April nesting season, these smallish, fast-flying seabirds trade chores in a quick exchange at dawn. The parent freed of egg-sitting duty arrows off at 55 m.p.h. for Humboldt Bay to fish for breakfast. Thron was pleased; the murrelets are endangered because they need redwood canopies to shield their nest sites from crows and ravens. He had not checked his birds since Thanksgiving because he had been touring the U.S. with his slide show, buying gas and burgers with freewill...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Redwoods: The Last Stand | 6/6/1994 | See Source »

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